Bahraini Human rights activist Nabeel Rajab has been sentenced to three years in jail for “participation in an illegal assembly” and “calling for a march without prior notification.”

Rajab has been in police custody since June 6 over comments he
made on Twitter critical of the Bahraini Prime Minister, which
called for him to step down. Rajab was sentenced on July 9 to three
months for the remarks, raising concerns worldwide among
free-speech activists.

Rajab, a prominent human rights activist, led several
anti-regime demonstrations in recent months. The activist is also
affiliated with international rights groups such as Human Rights
Watch. Opposition rallies have repeatedly called for his
release.

A lower Bahraini court added three years to Rajab’s sentence on
Thursday for“involvement in illegal practices and inciting
gatherings and calling for unauthorized marches through social
networking sites,” and for his “participation in an
illegal assembly” and “participation in an illegal gathering and
calling for a march without prior notification.”

"Jail me 3 years or 30, I will never give up," Rajab’s
son Adam tweeted, quoting his father’s remarks.

Souhayr Belhassen, president of the International Federation for
Human Rights (FIDH), condemned the sentence: “It’s been over a
year that the Bahraini people have been peacefully asking for human
rights and democracy,” he said. “How does the government
remain so deaf to these calls? Arbitrarily imprisoning human rights
defenders will not stop the people from aspiring to freedom and
democratic change. We hope that the international community will
firmly condemn this decision and will call for Nabeel’s
release.”

Before his arrest, Rajab appeared as a guest on episode four of
‘The World Tomorrow’ on RT, hosted by WikiLeaks founder Julian
Assange. In the interview, he criticized the US-led invasion of
Iraq, as well as US refusals to take action during the Bahraini
protests and the wider Arab Spring.

“The Americans from the beginning, they didn’t want to
change those regimes, they didn’t want to change the regime in
Egypt, they didn’t want to change the regime," Rajab said.
“You see now for example, Bahrain is a good model. Iraq is
maybe the closest to us democratic state but Americans are against
democracy in Bahrain now.”

Rajab was arrested May 5th, days after his appearance on the
show, leading many to believe it was a government reprisal against
his protest actions.

Rajab’s sentencing is the latest in a fierce crackdown on
dissent in Bahrain. On Wednesday, human rights activist Said Yousif
wrote on Twitter that he had been arrested at a checkpoint in the
town of A'ali. Yousif had previously spoken out in support of
Rajab.

Security forces manning the checkpoint had contacted his wife so
that she could pick up his“two little kids,” Yousif said,
and no further information was forthcoming.

­

Protests rage on

Pro-democracy rallies and protests in Bahrain have continued for
the past year. Several activists have been detained by the
government on various charges carrying harsh sentences, including
“setting up terror groups to topple the royal regime and change
the constitution.”

The crackdown has prompted widespread international
condemnation. Some human rights organizations, including Amnesty
International, claimed that criminal proceedings against the
activists were not democratic.

Amnesty International cited an incident when a ruling judge
ordered that hearings be moved behind closed doors, where
defendants would be filmed. In response, the arrested activists
fired their lawyers, but the court simply appointed new defense
lawyers.

"The Bahraini authorities must end this travesty of justice…
They are prisoners of conscience, held solely for peacefully
exercising their rights to freedom of expression, association and
assembly," said Hassiba Hadj Sahraoui, Amnesty International’s
deputy director for the Middle East and North Africa.

Amnesty International also urged Bahraini authorities to conduct
an independent investigation into allegations of the torture of
detained activists.

The sentencing raises questions about US support for the Sunni
monarchy; Bahrain is the headquarters of the US Navy's Fifth Fleet,
and was designated a major non-NATO ally in October 2001.

­Colin Cavell, a former lecturer at the University of Bahrain,
told RT that the court's decision is merely a play in the US
political game, which supports the tyrannical regime to maintain
military might in the region.

“Because of basing rights in the ports of Bahrain, and
because of tarmac rights at the Sheik Isa Air Base, the US is able
to far project its military might in the entire Middle East and to
maintain US hegemony in the region,” he said. “What this
jail sentence of three years for Mr. Nabeel Rajab indicates is that
the Bahraini government is increasingly paranoid because three
quarters of the Bahraini population want the 229-year monarchy to
end.”